Brewed in Detroit
Breweries and Beers Since 1830
Peter H. Blum
Hardback
ISBN: 9780814326619
Pages: 358 Size: 7x10
Illustrations: 177 black and white images
Review
Peter Blum's long association with Stroh, his academic training in brewing chemistry and his unparalleled scholarly interest in the history of Michigan brewing all combine to make him uniquely qualified to produce the definitive work on Detroit breweries.
— George Woodman Hilton
Brewed in Detroit describes the history of the brewing industry in the Detroit metropolitan area (including Ann Arbor, Mt. Clemens, Pontiac, Windsor, Wyandotte, and Ypsilanti) from its beginning in the 1830s to the present revival by microbrewers and brewpubs.
A historian and trained veteran of the brewing industry, Peter H. Blum divides Detroit brewing history into seven distinct phases: the early Anglo-Saxon ale brewers, the German brewers who arrived after 1848, the rise of brewing dynasties in the 1880s, Prohibition, the return of beer in the era after repeal in 1933, the war years, and the postwar competition.
Each brewery's story is told in terms of the individuals and families who started the enterprise, and chronicles their fortunes and failures. The book concludes with a compilation of every brewery in Detroit of which there is a record, brand names of all beers and ales marketed in Detroit, production figures of all Detroit breweries since 1933, a glossary of technical terms, and an index.
Peter Blum's long association with Stroh, his academic training in brewing chemistry and his unparalleled scholarly interest in the history of Michigan brewing all combine to make him uniquely qualified to produce the definitive work on Detroit breweries.
– George Woodman Hilton, Professor Emeritus of Economics, UCLA